my kids food
My 3 yr old son wanted to eat his brownie for dessert, but I wanted him to eat his dinner. We (he and I) fought for some time about it. That lead to the Mrs. and I getting in to it.
She believes to fight like that is counter productive. Her parents used to do it to her, and she feels it makes you eat enough to get the dessert, thus consuming more calories.
he is healthy, and she feels that I shouldn't fight over it w/ him. There were plenty of skinny kids in school who ate nothing but chips and diet soda, whereas she was a fluffy girl, who ate her veggies....and her ice cream.
So what are you thoughts?
i think ultimately it depends on his metabolism as to whether or not he's even going to burn the extra calories he gets from eating dessert after eating his dinner. i think the main issue really is the point you were trying to make. you were trying to get your son to eat his food rather than junk.....food that would provide vitamins and energy to get his body to burn the calories he was consuming during the meal. to just allow him to eat his brownie instead of his meal would be permitting him to fill himself up on something with a high fat content, and a high sugar content....which turns to fat eventually if not used in the body.
i'm sure your wife meant well, and it seemed as though her intentions were in the right place. but, sometimes, when we try to protect our kids from going down the same road that we went on, we end up making things more difficult for us and them. don't fight....be partners and compromise.
by the way....what was the outcome? what did he end up eating?
And if we complained about what was for dinner, we were not set a place and we were not permitted to have anything else. If we decided we WERE hungry for dinner, we had to bring a chair over to the cabinet, get out a place setting, set the table ourselves etc etc etc (no easy task for a 3 y/o I might add)
That being said, I still ended up weighing 235 pounds.
Now....do I think a child should be allowed to eat a brownie and not his dinner? No. If his thoughts on it are "the brownie or nothing" then nothing it is.
However...I don't know if you're wife and you disagreed in front of the child...but remember they figure out very quickly when they can "play" their parents against each other and when the one parent disagrees with the other parent.
Good luck!
Pam
on 1/9/09 8:44 pm
That doesn`t mean they are or will be healthy with good habits. Under normal cir****tances why does he need desert? Make fruit of raw veggies the desert that he craves.
PS=she didn`t get fluffy eating vegetables
"If I only had three words of advice, they would be, Tell the Truth. If got three more words, I'd add, all the time."
— Randy Pausch
In the end, I gave them SF Applesauce for dessert. My complaint was also, that I stopped and got some SF chocolates, and they got a SF cookie each, which they ate on the way home....and we went to the bank, and they got a lollipop. Then we sat down for dinner.....
As far as my wife being a fluffly girl who ate her veggies....and her ice cream...that paraphrases what she said...She used the F word. But she would eat whatever she needed to, in order to have dessert. So she would cram down a 600 calorie plus (her mom doesn't cook light), then eat a 400-600 calorie ice cream. Now she consumed 1200 calories.
I also know that post op emotiions tend to run high so I can't imagine that being on both sides of the equation. I would suggest that you and your wife talk, without the kids around, about what you think that their meal routine and diets should be. My husband and I have actually already started discussing that and I am not even pregnant yet - lol I know - I over plan everything!
Hope that this helps!!
Liz
BTW - you need to update that avatar photo! Isn't that a pre-op photo?
Chris